South Beach North

According to some Miami locals, this is where East Coast hardcore rapper 50 Cent and his boys were inspired to write the song ‘Candy Shop’, after a night out drinking champagne in the lounges of South Beach.

If you had to pick one area in Miami in which to be seen looking your finest, then it would be between 14th Street and 22nd Street, where Ocean Drive peters out and Collins Avenue ditches the shops and goes all-out on hotels and party lounges.

This is the epicentre of fashion, dining, parties and a general level of debauchery unmatched anywhere else in America. ‘On the Beach’ is where the majority of celebs and wannabes do their thing, where the Hummer limos glide menacingly up to the velvet ropes, spilling diamond-clad men and cosmetically enhanced women into the enveloping darkness of yet another VIP lounge.

Mynt, Rok Bar, Sky Bar and Amika are just some of the big name lounges and clubs that typify the area. Glamorous, extravagant and sleek, the clubs are like their clientele. This is where fantasies come true, glam up to the max, bring out your Amex black and lose track of time, your life and your pension plan.

Up this end of South Beach, the hotels are bigger – bigger meaning better in the eyes of the Miami local. The Setai, the Raleigh, the Shore Club and the Delano are all famous names and cater for those with big budgets. Go for a walk up Collins Avenue and drink at the Art Deco hotel bars, or stroll along the beach and take in the sights of the most exclusive stretch of sand in town.

If Collins is the main artery of this northern part of South Beach, then Lincoln Road is the heartbeat, and the place to find the best shops, restaurants, bars and nightclubs; the most interesting parts of this outdoor mall are between Washington Avenue and Alton Road, where people-watching has become a competitive art form.

For lovers of Hispanic culture, look no further than Española Way. There you will find a crowded little gem of a street packed with restaurants. Most of them can be ignored, but some are popular with Spanish locals who love their tapas and vino tinto.

The north of South Beach area ends on the border of what is considered to be Mid Beach. As a rule of thumb, there’s no real need to go  further north than this point unless you are going to play golf, looking for a quiet spot on the beach, or require a hotel that’s off the beaten track. Otherwise South Beach is the reason why most people go to Miami.


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